Evidence for a new class of extreme ultraviolet sources
Abstract
Most of the sources detected in the extreme ultraviolet (EUV; 100-600A) by the ROSAT/WFC and EUVE all-sky surveys have been identified with active late-type stars and hot white dwarfs that are near enough to the Earth to escape absorption by interstellar gas. However, about 15 per cent of EUV sources are as yet unidentified with any optical counterparts. We examine whether the unidentified EUV sources may consist of the same population of late-type stars and white dwarfs. We present B and R photometry of stars in the fields of seven of the unidentified EUV sources. We detect in the optical the entire main-sequence and white dwarf population out to the greatest distances where they could still avoid absorption. We use colour-magnitude diagrams to demonstrate that, in most of the fields, none of the observed stars has the colours and magnitudes of late-type dwarfs at distances less than 100pc. Similarly, none of the observed stars is a white dwarf within 500pc that is hot enough to be a EUV emitter. The unidentified EUV sources we study are not detected in X-rays, while cataclysmic variables, X-ray binaries, and active galactic nuclei generally are. We conclude that some of the EUV sources may be a new class of nearby objects, which are either very faint at optical bands or which mimic the colours and magnitudes of distant late-type stars or cool white dwarfs. One candidate for optically faint objects is isolated old neutron stars, slowly accreting interstellar matter. Such neutron stars are expected to be abundant in the Galaxy, and have not been unambiguously detected.
- Publication:
-
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Pub Date:
- May 1997
- DOI:
- 10.1093/mnras/287.2.293
- arXiv:
- arXiv:astro-ph/9612149
- Bibcode:
- 1997MNRAS.287..293M
- Keywords:
-
- STARS: ACTIVITY;
- STARS: NEUTRON;
- NOVAE;
- CATACLYSMIC VARIABLES;
- WHITE DWARFS;
- X-RAYS: STARS;
- Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 8 pages, incl. figures, MNRAS, accepted